Four Treasures of Adventism
A lecture series for Green Lake Church
of Seventh-day Adventists
NOTE: I am not preaching this morning. The sermon at Green Lake Church will be delivered by Andreas Beccai, our youth pastor. Since I'm posting this a week early, criticism has the real potential of influencing the final form.
Lecture
Two: God Is Love
Sabbath School, April 6,
2013
God is love. God showed how much he loved us by sending his one and
only Son into the world so that we might have eternal life through
him. This is real love—not that we loved God, but that he loved us
and sent his Son as a sacrifice to take away our sins. Dear friends,
since God loved us that much, we surely ought to love each other. 1
John 4:8-11
Apophaticism
Theologians
in the Eastern Orthodox tradition have developed an approach to
theology called apophaticism. Apophaticism is the conviction that
humans cannot make any deeply meaningful, affirmative statement about
God because of the inherent limitations of human language. For
example, if I say God is love, that would be a false statement
because my understanding of love is so meager and so defective that
my words distort more than they inform.*
This
idea can be very seductive, especially for religious people who are
philosophically inclined. We know there are vast oceans or even
galaxies of unknowing surrounding us. It is indisputably true that
the more we know, the more aware we can be of what we don't know. We
can even cite Bible passages that caution us about the limits of our
capacity to define God.
"My thoughts are nothing like
your thoughts," says the LORD. "And my ways are far beyond
anything you could imagine. For just as the heavens are
higher than the earth, so my ways are higher than your ways and my
thoughts higher than your thoughts. Isaiah 55:8-9
Apophaticism
is a good thing when it reminds us that human language is inadequate
to voice the full truth about God. There is a proper humility for
those of us who attempt to speak truthfully about God. We cannot
escape our own skins, our own personal and cultural histories. The
Bible itself contains stories of people who had emphatic opinions
about God—opinions that were judged to be false. (See the
complicated stories in 1 Kings 13 and Jeremiah 28.)
But apophaticism
can be overdone. All of us humans eventually come to the end of our
humility. We can say “I don't know!” and “We can't know!”
only so long. Eventually, being human, we cannot help ourselves: we
do have opinions, not just mild, casual opinions, but deep-set
convictions, about the fundamental nature of reality, about what is
true, about what ought to be true.
We believe that
truth and beauty, kindness and generosity, honesty and integrity are
not just different from falsehood, ugliness, meanness, stinginess,
dishonesty and duplicity. We believe these virtues are “better.”
They are morally superior to the vices. This notion of morality
cannot be reduced to a mere synonym of any other category. The
virtues are more beautiful than the vices, yes. But beautiful doesn't
quite say what we mean when we say the virtues are superior. The
virtues are more desirable, they are more life-enhancing, yes, but
when we say they are morally better, we mean something other than
desirable or life-enhancing. Morality is a category that cannot be
reduced to any non-religious or non-philosophical/theological term.
All normal humans have moral convictions, even people who argue for a
Darwinian origin of our moral sensibility end up arguing for
truthfulness and honesty in dealing with data in a way that presumes
a meaning for “moral conviction” that is not accounted for in any
naturalistic explanation.
The most basic
of all moral convictions for Adventists is simply this: God is love.
God Is Love
Years
ago, when we lived in Thousand Oaks, CA, our yard bordered a large
city park. We answered a knock at the door one day to find a rather
cross Parks Department official standing there. “Did we have a
brown dog?”
“Yes.”
“All
the garbage cans in the park have been tipped over and garbage is
everywhere. Witnesses say it was done by a brown dog that they have
seen in your yard. This is not the first time the park has been
trashed. We believe your dog is responsible. If you do not keep your
dog in, you will be assessed a significant fine. If that doesn't
persuade you to keep your dog in, the dog will be confiscated.”
I
had one thing going in my favor. One of our neighbors had alerted us
that the parks people were after us. And she had told the parks
people that we worked hard at keeping our dog in. We did not
deliberately let the dog run.
So
now, facing the Parks official, I repeated what our neighbor had
said. We had been working for months to make the yard escape-proof.
We blocked his holes under the fence with logs and cinder blocks.
Then he started jumping over the fence on the other side the yard. We
knew he was getting out. And after he escaped, he always eventually
came home and scratched at the front door. But we had no idea he was
trashing the park. We thought he was just chasing gophers in the
field next to the park.
The
parks official was not amused. We were going to have to do something
or face the consequences—a fine and possible confiscation of the
dog. I made a counter offer. I would try harder to keep the dog in,
though short of chaining him, I couldn't promise he would never get
out. But then I offered this: I would check the park daily. If the
trash cans were knocked over, I would clean it up. Whether it was
Toby or another animal or vandals, it didn't matter. If the cans were
knocked over, I would clean it up.
It
was a deal.
So
for the next few years that we lived there, every time Toby showed up
at our front door wanting to be let in, I would put him in his
kennel, then go check the park. Frequently, I spent a half hour
picking up McDonalds bags with ketchup and food smeared on the
outside, cigarette butts, paper plates coated with food on both
sides. Napkins. Soda bottles and cans. Wrappers. Watermelon rinds.
And worst of all, dirty diapers.
All
of you who are dog lovers immediately get this story. If Toby were
your dog, you would have done the same thing. Toby's problems were my
problems. Part of the meaning of the word “love” is a commitment
to the other.
When
the Bible describes God as a shepherd and people as his sheep, the
Bible is setting us up with certain expectations about God. When
Jesus told the story about the lost sheep, his audience was not
surprised at the searching of the shepherd. Good shepherds go out in
cold, wet, miserable weather to find lost sheep. That's what good
shepherds do. And we expect a good shepherd usually to be successful
in his search for his sheep.
For
a good shepherd, the problems of the sheep are his problems. This has
profound theological implications which I will come back to a little
later.
The
dominant metaphor for God in Scripture is Father.
A
couple of paternal pictures from the story of David are deeply
revealing. David was apparently not much of a disciplinarian. Maybe
this is why he is called the man after God's own heart? David's son
Amnon raped his half-sister Tamar. David was angry but did nothing.
So two years later, Tamar's full brother, Absalom, killed Amnon to
avenge the rape. Absalom fled the kingdom to escape punishment, and
three years later David's pining his absent son Absalom is greater
than his outrage over his dead son. Absalom is brought back from
Gerar. Things happen and eventually Absalom leads a rebellion aimed
at unseating King David and placing Absalom himself on the throne.
The rebellion fails. Absalom is killed. And when David hears that
Absalom is dead, he collapses into an agony of grief, crying, "O
my son Absalom! My son, my son Absalom! If only I had died instead of
you! O Absalom, my son, my son." 2 Samuel 18:33.
In
this story, we see the danger of being overly permissive, the danger
of an authority figure ignoring injustice. David's inaction against
Tamar's rapist set up this entire sorry tale. But it is the final
picture of David lamenting over his son, a son killed in his
rebellion against the throne, that Christian preachers have come back
to over and over again as a picture of the heart of God.
God's
connection with humanity is so close, his love is so intense, that
when confronted with the bald choice between self-preservation and
the preservation of even a rebellious child, God would choose the
preservation of the child.
I
argue that if we were to see God make that choice, we would not scorn
God for being sentimental. We would honor God for being sacrificial.
We would understand his sacrifice as the highest imaginable
expression of love.
One
more picture from the life of David. Some years after Absalom's
rebellion, David has become so infirm he is bedfast. At a point of
crisis he abdicates in favor of his son Solomon. The abdication is
not surprising given the situation, but what is remarkable is the
comment of one of his courtiers when David makes the official
pronouncement: “And may the LORD be with Solomon as
he has been with you, my lord the king, and may he make Solomon's
reign even greater than yours!" 1 Kings 1:37
It's
fascinating to read this wish against the cultural backdrop of the
passage. The king's favorite wife has come in to see him and she has
bowed and paid obvious obeisance. Then Nathan the Prophet, who has
more than once challenged the king, comes in. He, too, bows and goes
through the formula acknowledging David's absolute preeminence. No
one is the king's equal. Not a favorite wife, not a famous prophet,
not leading generals, not even the high priest. But then someone
speaks of the king's role as a father and suddenly the nicest thing
you can wish for is to see the king superceded! “May your son be
greater than you.”
It's
the dream of every dad for his children: May they do better than I
have. One of the greatest fears of the very rich is that their
children will be less than their parents.
One
more biblical picture of God as Father.
When
we go through the gospels and notice Jesus' use of this metaphor,
what leaps out is his instinctive, unvarying assumption that fathers
are trustworthy and generous. Nowhere in all of the father metaphors
Jesus uses is there even a hint of sternness or magisterial
aloofness. Note these phrases from Matthew 6:
Your
Father, who sees what you do in private, will reward you.
Your
Father already knows what you need before you ask him.
Look at the birds . . . your Father takes care of them!
Aren't you worth much more than birds?
It
is God who clothes the wild grass . . . Won't he be all the more sure
to clothe you?
Do not worry, saying, "What will I eat?" or
"What will I wear?" Your Father in heaven knows that you
need all these things . . . and he will provide you with them.
Matthew
6
Jesus
portrays God as an idealized human father. He is responsive and
affirming, aware, not aloof or absent. He actively provides for us.
He takes note of our noble deeds and rewards them. He delights in
doing us good. The presumption is that the father will make sure life
goes well for his children. The primary responsibility for the
well-being of the children resides with the father not with the
children. And God happily embraces this responsibility.
Fear not, little flock. It is your Father's good
pleasure to give you the kingdom (Luke 12:32).
Then
there is the father of the prodigal son. He eats the shame his
younger son has brought on the family and welcomes the wastrel home.
Then when the older son expresses scorn and resentment toward his
younger brother (and by implication scorn for his father who welcomed
the jerk home), the father does not rebuke the older brother, but
affirms his place—all that I have is yours—and leaves open the
possibility for the older brother to yet join the father in
celebrating the resurrection of his lost brother.
Jesus
expects his audience to buy the story. The father's generosity is
surprising, maybe even astounding, but Jesus expects his audience to
hear somewhere in their own hearts an incontrovertible yes to the
father's generosity.
So
what?
These
pictures of the God who loves—the shepherd who regards the lostness
of his sheep as “his problem,” the father who values the
preservation and exaltation of his sons over his own, the father who
is trustworthy, generous, forgiving—have important theological
implications.
Let
me address two. First: what grief says about God.
According
to popular Christian teaching, when someone dies, he or she goes
immediately into the presence of God or enters the torments of hell.
In this view, before death, God is limited in his interaction with
people by the illusions and frailty of our bodily existence. When a
believer dies, death heals this separation and leads immediately to
the joy of unhindered spiritual fellowship between God and his
children. So, for God, death is a great boon. It is the door through
which he welcome his children into sweet, eternal communion with him.
We who are left bereft on earth may be wracked by grief, but God's
heart is gladdened by the homeward flight of his child.
According
to Adventist theology, when someone dies, the person stops
interacting with God through prayer, worship and obedience. People
are not lost to the heart or memory of God. But as an active,
thinking, loving, talking human beings, dead people are as
unavailable to God as they are to their grieving friends on earth.
In the language of the Bible, the person "sleeps" (John
11:11-14). A dead person has no awareness of time or "waiting."
The person remains "unconscious" until the resurrection. At
the second coming all God's people are united and taken en masse into
the presence of God. They all arrive at the heavenly party together
(Hebrews 11:39-40).
In
this view, God himself is deprived of the living companionship of a
person who dies–just as are the grieving family and friends.
Instead of death being a boon to God, death robs God of the worship
of his people (Psalm 115:17). When people die, the heavenly Father no
longer hears the voices of his children in praise and prayer. He has
memories to cherish and a future to anticipate, but he is not in
fellowship with their vital, interactive "souls."
In
this view, human grief is a mirror, an image, of the grief of God. It
is a truism that when children hurt, their moms and dads hurt as much
as or more than the little ones. And God, our heavenly parent, hurts
for his children. When grief batters our hearts and wets our eyes,
God hurts because we hurt. But there is more to God's grief than
that. God's grief is not only the response of his heart to the pain
that wound us. God himself is wounded by the separation caused by
death. Death interrupts God's own conversation with his child. God
bears the emotional cost of the system he has designed and allows to
continue even in its broken condition. When it comes to enduring
pain, God asks nothing of us he does not require of himself.
This
perspective of God as a grieving parent has large implications for
how we view the "delay of the Advent." Why hasn't Jesus
returned as he promised? What's taking so long? Explanations include:
God is waiting because he wants to save more people. He is waiting
for some predetermined time. He waits for evil to reach its full
flower or for the gospel to be preached in all the world or for the
character of Christ to be perfectly reproduced in his people.
Each
of these theories has something to recommend it, and each has
problems. The Adventist understanding of the nature of death does not
answer the question, why does God wait? It does, however, change the
emotional content of the question. In addition to asking why God
doesn't hurry up and rescue us from our trouble (a very good and
proper question), this picture of God's grief prompts us to ask, why
doesn't God spare himself? If the redeemed between death and
resurrection day, then every day God delays the second coming is
another day he carries the wounds of his own bereavement. Since God
loves every human more intensely than a mother loves her only child,
the Adventist understanding of death is a picture of a brokenhearted
God.
In
the traditional view of death, there is diminished motivation for God
to bring human history to an end. Every day God is welcoming children
home. But in the Adventist view, every day that passes adds to the
grief that weighs on God's heart. God does not ask us to bear burdens
he himself does not carry. He does not encourage us to be brave in
the face of pain that he himself does not feel.
I
remember listening to a funeral sermon at a funeral in Akron, Ohio.
On the front row were four or five kids, siblings of an
eight-year-old boy who was killed when the front wheel of his bicycle
hit a rock threw him in front of a car.
The
preacher spoke directly to the young people on the front row. "Try
not to take your brother's death too hard. I know you miss him, but
God needed him up in heaven and that's why he took him. God must have
some very important job in mind for your brother up there. Stay close
to Jesus and some day you'll join your brother in heaven, and he'll
show you around the New Jerusalem and tell you all about what he's
been doing while you were down here working for Jesus."
The
pastor was doing what a pastor is supposed to do–mining the
spiritual and theological resources of his community for all the
comfort and solace he could find. I was not critical of the pastor as
a person, but I was appalled at the theology that drove his words.
"So
are you telling me," I imagined shouting, "that every time
God runs low on kitchen help in the heavenly cafeteria he throws
rocks in front of little kids' bike tires? Is God really that hard up
for help in heaven? What kind of God is that?"
This
view, if true, would mean our deepest wounds bring great joy to God.
People who are the most lovable and leave the greatest hole here on
earth when they die, bring instant joy in the courts of heaven. We on
earth bear all the cost of improving heaven's work force.
The
popular view of death does offer some comfort. It places those who
have died in a good place far from all pain (though logically, the
joy of heaven would be tainted by the awareness that "back on
earth" are loved ones still exposed to evil and suffering). This
traditional view actually does offer an accurate description of the
experience of the person who dies. When a believer dies, the very
next moment in their experience will be the resurrection and the
presence of God. The time in the grave that is felt all too keenly by
grieving survivors does not exist in the experience of the one who
has died.
The
Adventist understanding of death addresses the reality of pain
confronted by those who are still alive. For those who survive the
death of a loved one, the "immediate" reality is grief and
hurt. And in every death, one of the survivors, one of the mourners,
is God himself. There is no benefit for God in the death of his
children. He is not knocking off children to fill the heavenly
kitchens or choirs. He does not forget our grief in the great joy of
his communion with his children who have escaped into his presence
from their earthly prisons. Instead God enters the very depths of our
grief. In fact, our purest, deepest grief is but a faint reflection
of God's grief. If we are able to receive it, the pain of our grief
is a stern education about the depth and intensity of God's love.
A
second theological implication: I do not expect most (or even many)
to be lost.
Can
we imagine a “good father” would allow his children to romp in a
playground where there was a real likelihood that they would fall
into a trap from which that all the resources of heaven would be
inadequate to rescue them?
The
standard Christian view of humanity is that because of the error of
Adam and Eve in the garden all of humanity is naturally damned. A few
may accept God's offer of gracious deliverance, but the default
destiny of all humans is damnation and only a few will avoid it.
If
Toby the dog was confiscated from the McLarty house and sent to the
pound and then because no one else wanted him he was euthanized, in
our home that would be considered a massive failure—not a failure
by Toby, but a failure by the McLarty zoo to find an adequate way to
deal with his nature.
If
the shepherd did not find the lost sheep, in Jesus' story, it is the
shepherd who would be called a failure, not the sheep.
In
the story of the prodigal, at the end of the story, the father's
heart remains wide open to both sons.
When
I was young, I spent a huge amount of energy searching a reassuring
answer to the question: will I be saved? Have I been perfect enough?
Then later, was my faith sufficiently real to qualify me for
salvation by faith? I projected onto God, my sense of
never-quite-good-enough that I developed in my family of origin.
Now
I am old. The pictures of God as Father are turned on their head. I
no longer imagine myself primarily as “son.” I am father, the
father three kids or four, counting the one who died, or five
counting my daughter-in-law or dozens or scores counting the young
people who have have sneaked into my heart.
As
father, the question is not what do these children have to do to
avoid my condemnation. More meaningful questions would be, What
could they possibly do that would cause me to damn them? Can I
persuade myself they are so broken the universe would be better
without them? Can I imagine sustaining the pain of my own existence
in their absolute, eternal absence?
God
is love. This conviction, illuminated by the metaphors of Scripture
and our own deep understanding of parental and shepherd and
pet-keeping love, should lead us to reverse our question “who could
possibly be saved, given human sinfulness.” Instead we should ask,
“Who could possibly be lost given the love and resourcefulness of
God?” Then, having dismissed our fearful concern with damnation we
are freed to ask really good questions like: what can I do with
the life God has given me? What shall I do to make the world a
sweeter, more beautiful place? Whom can I touch with help, healing
and hope?
4 comments:
It will be harder to be lost than to be saved? For a life-long Adventist believer, I had almost reconciled myself to continuing anxiety over assurance of salvation and the once-saved/always-saved doctrine (another issue). Makes sense that once this anxiety is taken care of, more energy can go to living and loving those God puts in one's path. Recently, this DNA-soaked question has been diluted, and I see light at the end of the tunnel. Since God is good - utterly and always good - and I have experienced and believed that - where did the anxiety come from? It involves my grown children and their families too. This is huge, and it sounds as if this coming weekend will address these issues further. I hope and expect so. Just finished Michael Phillips' book on intimacy with God.
How about "discussion" rather than "criticism"? Friends can discuss, even passionately, things they absolutely disagree on - and still respect each other's convictions and the integrity of each other's person-hood. But in our denomination, in the interest of seeking righteousness and perfection and truth and superiority and authority and...... we have criticized to the point of losing touch with humanity. In fact, if Jesus visited many of our churches today - not only would He find Himself rejected because He was not good enough - His theology was flawed - and He brought the wrong kinds of people in.
So - I will discuss with you, my friend. But I would think someone must be awfully bold to criticize you, a conscientious and studied follower of Jesus whose ministry has brought great blessing to so many.
:-) Spoken like a true father.... Love it!!!!! Thanks.
I discovered the SDA theology of death just before my mother died. I am sooooo glad that she has not been in heaven fretting over all of her wayward kids as we tried to get adult lives without her there to love and guide us. Thanks.
Hi John,
I really liked the post. There is no perfect solution to understanding god or the role of death and the different ways church looks at this subject. I agree with your view, but also wonder what the husband, for example, who sees his wife is suffering from a terminal disease, in pain every day, thinks of having to wait for peace on earth. I imagine there are some who don't want to wait a minute longer.
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